William Allen

William Allen, (born 1532, Rossall, Lancashire, England—died October 16, 1594, Rome [Italy]), English cardinal and scholar who supervised the preparation of the Roman Catholic Douai-Reims translation of the Bible and engaged in intrigues against the Protestant regime of Queen Elizabeth I.

Educated at the University of Oxford, Allen became principal of St. Mary’s Hall there in 1556. After the accession of Queen Elizabeth he fell under suspicion for refusing to take an oath acknowledging the Queen as governor of the English church. Further government pressure caused him to leave England in 1565 for Mechelen in the Spanish Netherlands, where he was ordained priest. In 1568 Allen founded at Douai (then in the Spanish Netherlands, now in France) a seminary for training Englishmen as missionary priests. He was president and lecturer of this seminary until 1585, moving with it to Reims in 1578. The school gave its name to the influential Douai-Reims version of the Bible, translated by Gregory Martin under Allen’s direction.

Allen also helped found the English college in Rome in 1576. In 1580 he organized the first Jesuit missions to England—where Roman Catholic worship was prohibited—but in subsequent years he despaired of restoring Catholicism to his native country by peaceful means. He therefore called upon King Philip II of Spain to conquer England and assume the English throne; as a consequence he was made cardinal at Philip’s request in 1587. But England’s defeat of the Spanish Armada (1588) ended Allen’s political intrigues. In 1584 he wrote a tract defending English Catholics from charges of treason by William Cecil, Lord Burghley. From 1585 until his death Cardinal Allen lived in Rome at the English College, where he helped in the revision of the Catholic version of the Latin Bible, known as the Vulgate.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen, Corrections Manager.